Category Archives: Light
The Conscious World of Alden Cole
Alden Cole @ Galleria Deptford – Deptford Municipal Building, 1011 Cooper Street, Woodbury NJ.
While Alden installed his fantastical display of luminaries he was constantly stopped by the flow of visitors to the lobby of the Deptford Municipal Building, everyone wants to know what they are or they have a story about one of the components or their grandmother had a lamp just like that. Cole takes memories, shakes them up in his mind, recombining the pieces into objects with the logic of dreams; people are drawn to the glowing objects, filled with little stories, overflowing with light and love. And people are drawn towards him to find out how he figures this out and if he wants their grandmothers old lamps or why didn’t they think of that? Alden has a story for each luminary and a moment for each admirer.
Stars Stairway, in Alden Cole‘s gallery/studio in South Philly.
Starlings Under Glass #4, oil on glass, Alden Cole @ The Plastic Club, Red White & Green Show.
Memento Mori #1, marker, Alden Cole @ Conscious World of Art. Alden is influenced by Nicholas Roerich and Mati Klarwein – Roerich was the first artist to win a Nobel Peace Prize and Klarwein created the famous Santana album cover. Alden Cole‘s art brings people together, his art works the room like a good conversation, creating a buzz, upping the voltage with voodoo god-heads & peaceful warriors. Alden’s Starlings series taps into a deeply seated symbol pattern recognition with his sprightly characters playing out human emotions and exhibitionism in a playful accessible way. James Warhola just acquired one of Alden Cole‘s pieces at the Da Vinci Art Alliance’s current show.
Starlings #2 & Delicious, shown here @ The Plastic Club, now available @ Dumpster Divers Gallery, 734 South Street. Don’t worry, be happy. Alden Cole currently has work available at the Deptford Municipal Building Galleria Deptford (psst…really great prices, big selection), The Plastic Club’s Red, White & Green show, the Da Vinci Art Alliance Under $200, SOTA on Pine Street, Home & Planet in Bethlehem, the Dumpster Divers Gallery on South Street and @ The Conscious World Art of Alden Cole Gallery/Museum.
DoN LoVeS this photo with Alden Cole‘s Light Beings and DoN‘s “light being (Rick Selvin)” @ Galleria Deptford.
40,000 Feet – UpDate – Ice Box show extended through 11/29/09
Su Tomesen‘s extraordinary video installation, 40,000 Feet, in the Ice Box Gallery @ The Crane Arts Center has been extended through 11/29/09. The multi-screen movie is a visual and sensory exploration of the sky as viewed from above, take time to visit the show which originally was to close yesterday due to the upcoming holiday. Photos courtesy of Su Tomesen.
13 Months, Retrospective @ Area 919
Amy Schmidt, Toy Soldier @ Area 919, 919 North 5th Street, a survey of the past year of exhibitions. From a distance the content of this image is clear, a young masked rebel with a gun but up close – break me off a toy soldier. The collage is a huge collection of tiny war toys: plastic soldiers, tanks, planes, bugs, dolls, animals the subtext is powerful in what Amy Potsic called the political room.
The art work collected in the newly refurbished back gallery is all politically motivated from TODTs, Camera (an old camera with a fetus trapped inside created in 1980, still relevant considering the current debate concerning abortion), to Abby Schmidts Tank (encaustic made from melted crayons on a light box depicting children looking back at an approaching tank) to Potsics own photographs commenting on Chinese oppression of its people. DoN likes arguing about difficult art and this show really pissed him off.
Abby Schmidt, Fossil Fooled @ Area 919. This piece is not so easily read but its all plastic dinosaurs – plastic is made from oil, oil is made from dinosaurs, dinosaurs are dead.
Abby Schmidt, Jessica, melted crayons on light box. Schmidt mixes her own colors by melting crayons together to create flesh tones creating a new take on everlasting encaustic. The subject is fat babies being fed, the look in their eyes is frantic, as if they know theyve already eaten too much – Mom, please stop!
Abby Schmidt, Jessica, melted crayons. There are three of these big baby portraits hanging together, heroic in size, extreme close-ups of glowing skin shines with the light of health – a strong condemnation of Americas obsession with food and never-ending quest for satisfaction.
Amy Potsic, Made in China – Female Adoption, Made in China – One Child Limit, Made in China – Reproductive Rights & Made in China – Population Control, archival pigment print, each 24″ x 48″.
Amy Potsic, Made in China – Exile, archival pigment print. Potsics Made in China series is based on traditional scrolls but are actually all shot around town. Amy is a world traveler but came to the conclusion that Philly is a world class city and began shooting photographs as if she were in a foreign land. The aspect ratio of the camera dictated the scroll design, the content is traditional appearing Chinese imagery but is actually trees found locally, each representing the four seasons, each photo dedicated to forms of Chinese oppression and how America kowtows to the huge market even though they are literally plowing down traditional villages to build high-rise apartment with no concern for preserving history or up-rooting villagers. Hey, even Disneyland now has a franchise for Beijing. The photographs are luxurious and rich with crisp detail, saturated color and beautiful composition, if you did not know how angry Amy is about religious oppression in Tibet you would think these were an homage instead of condemnation.
Mark Khaisman, packing tape on light box @ Area 919.
Mark Khaisman uses tape to create drawings of Baroque and Rococo furniture found in Sotheby catalogs. The furniture is, of course, for rich people only and if you actually owned it you would never sit in it or write on it, you would probably put a velvet rope around it – thats what makes Khaismans drawings use of lowly plastic tape so appealing and intriguing. A former stained glass artist, Mark confidently twists and folds the tape into curvy lines, layering tape to create density and depth, transforming something so cheap into something precious and desirable.
TODT is an artist collective that have been working together (more or less) for 30 years, even though the member artists have individual names, they prefer to be known only as TODT. The group is primarily interested in the future and science, the above piece was developed in the early 80s, before computers, using a light-box they found on the street, the Marilyn is also a found object, the combination is truly prescient considering the current green trend, the use of electronics and light and mixed metaphor collage, très au courant yet timeless. TODTs resume includes the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Biennial, and many gallery & museum shows going back to 1979.
TODT, Eye Tower @ Area 919. This light sculpture was created for a gallery who fronted the funds to develop over a dozen pieces but the gallerist took off with nine of them, luckily several were saved along with material to make more. The staring eyeballs signaled the oncoming onslaught of oppressive mass surveillance of hidden watchmen cataloging our every move from trafffic lights to toll booths; a local real estate mangement office even has a camera just in case renters get pissed off and don’t pay up.
13 Months has plenty more to see with photos by John Rosser, furniture by Luis Montoya, Anthony Angelicola, Mike Parsell & Daniel Petraitis plus antiques and objects of desire. In just 13 months, Area 919 has established itself as an art force to be reckoned with.
Su Tomesen’s 40,000 Feet presented by I.C.E.
The Icebox @ Crane Arts Center in Fishtown is an enormous white, cavernous space with high walls and no columns, it actually used to be a huge refrigerator. Now it’s one of the premier art spaces in Philadelphia and through 11/22 will be hosting “40,000 Feet” by Su Tomesen, five huge projections of clouds viewed from an airplane with mist drifting across the floor and the low hum of jets, bleeps and bloops of seat-belt signs and the grind of lowering landing gear. The effect is that of the perfect flight, the magic of riding high in the sky finally restored without having to take off your shoes.
Su explained to DoN there are several variables: time, movement, imperfection and the human hand. The movie is not perfect, it’s not shot with five movie cameras somehow suspended from the underside of a plane, it’s the same clip playing at five different intervals. But the illusion of clouds drifting endlessly by is mesmerizing like flying on a magic carpet with the mist drifting through room creating a veil of mystery. Tomesen is thrilled with the space, the show previously was exhibited in a restaurant in Amsterdam above a row of windows abbreviating some of the magic.
40,000 Feet time-warped DoN back to cloud-watching with Grandma, looking for animals and faces in the sky while lying on the ground, only this time the view is from Heaven.
There is an artist reception Wednesday, 11/18 @ Crane Arts, 1400 American Street.